US President Donald Trump accidentally unveiled a Navy SEAL team during his short tour to a US base in Iraq in this week. Typically, the addresses of special operations pushes are held hidden closely. In the scarce examples, while they are captured in a battle zone, their overlooks and other recognition features are generally faded out.

But after his dazzling trip to AL-Asad Air Base in western Iraq, Trump tweeted a video of him featuring for photos with US guards, trembling their hands and signing memos. In one scene, he was presenting a thumbs up alongside a group of what becomes visible to be special operations forces. According to the report of the event, held in a dining hall at the base, a man named Kyu Lee informed Trump he was the chaplain for SEAL Team Five.

While the President has strong authority to unclassified information, so his tweet likely did not continue afoul of any rules, some individuals who are familiar with it called it a violation of operational security.

A former specialist of US Navy intelligence, Malcolm Nance told, “ even if it’s the commander-in-chief, would prove a propaganda boom if any of this personnel are detained by a hostile government or captured by a terrorist group”

Special Operations Command did not urgently reply to an appeal for comment.

Trump also generate criticism in the US for redoing a previous contradicted claim that he had

protected military members a fundraiser for the first time in 10 years, while in fact, the Pentagon has escalated pay each year.

Pursuing the visit to Iraq, pro-Iran legislators called for the government to ban US forces.

US President Donald Trump extremely lashed out at the top Democrat Nancy Pelosi on Sunday and she insisted one more that he put off government shutdown before the border security discussions can start, but there were chances for possible activity. Trump attacked Twitter, after the White House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, cancelled as a “non-starter” his offer for extending provisional safeguard to about a million immigrants in feedback for $5.7 billion...